Upload
others
View
6
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Legal Professional Negligence and Insurance
2013 © R. Lee Akazaki, C.S.
Partner, Gilbertson Davis Emerson LLP The comments herein are for educational purposes only and are not intended to provide professional advice.
Professional negligence and insurance are topics looming over every lawyer’s
head, for as long as he or she holds the licence, but which we prefer not to talk about in
polite company. Get over it. Although most lawyers will be blessed with a career
without a lawsuit against them, keeping it that way requires constant vigilance. For the
personal injury practitioner, clients have a bad habit of calling the office for a
consultation just before the limitation period expires. An ambiguously explained cloud
on title suddenly becomes a big issue when the purchaser client wants to flip the
property, a month later. The failure to bring a charter challenge to evidence obtained
on a search without a warrant. A calculation error on a spousal support calculation.
The moment after the error gets noticed, the instinctive response may be to
repair the situation by yourself. One of the most famous accounts of bungled self-help
was that of a former Law Society Treasurer who was reprimanded for an affair with a
family law client without first sending the client out for independent legal advice. In the
case, the lawyer asked the client mid-relationship to sign a waiver stating their
professional relationship had not suffered, without allowing the client an opportunity to
obtain independent legal advice. You would think the head of the Law Society would
have known to do that. Although this was a discipline matter, in many such instances
damages claims come in tandem with complaints to the regulator.
This paper will help you identify the sources of potential claims, and introduce
the nature of insurance coverage which may respond.
Some E&O Claims are More Viable than Others
Whatever preconceptions the public may harbour, some aspects of legal practice
are more prone to claims than others.
In the English Common Law, solicitors were subject to the law of negligence and
barristers could not be sued for courtroom errors. In Canada, where the bar combined
the two professional designations, lawyers could be sued for falling below the expected
standard of care. The Ontario Court of Appeal decision in Wong v. Thomson, Rogers
(1994), 48 A.C.W.S. (3d) 868 (Ont. C.A.), in which I appeared for the law firm, a Canadian
appellate court accepted for the first time the portion of the trial judgment in Demarco
v. Ungaro (1979), 95 D.L.R. (3d) 385 (Ont HCJ) which conferred a wide range of
discretion to litigation counsel for the tactical decisions they make in court and court
procedures.
It is actually hard to sue a litigation lawyer for any step requiring an exercise of
professional judgment during a hearing or trial. It is like suing a surgeon for using one
procedure as opposed to another, both of which are acceptable. Unfortunately, the
fear of being sued for exercise of judgment leads to defensive practices which are not
always in the client’s interests. Some examples of good practices which are watered
down or undermined by defensive litigation:
cutting short a cross-examination at a good moment can have maximum
impact with a jury; but counsel are afraid they will be criticized for failing
to ask every possible question
choosing the best legal arguments and addressing them in priority; but
counsel worry about their client’s pet arguments, some fanciful, which
they have instructed counsel to advance
admitting non-contested documents, to allow the court to focus on their
contents, not their admissibility; but counsel fear their clients perceive
concessions of any kind are signs of weakness
In contrast, the transactional lawyer’s job is to pore over paper documents to
ensure clients receive the maximum protection of the law. Whether it is a real estate
transaction, a business agreement, or a regulatory application, the client is paying for
the completeness of work, not necessarily for persuasion of a judicial or administrative
panel. If litigation arises from a dispute, it will be over the meaning of one, or at most a
handful, of words. Or it will be the failure to do something on time. The view that a
lawyer’s use of the word “and” instead of “or” to express the parties’ contracting
intentions is a classic example of the need for a lawyer to have a clear understanding of
the client’s instructions. Other problems, such as drafting style or the choice of terms to
define or not to define, require judgment and expertise which are less readily criticized.
In both litigation and transactional work, there is a simmering expectation on the
part of clients that lawyers engage in “strategic” practices or exercise “project
management” skills. This trend can impact your avoidance of errors and omissions in
two critical ways:
Excessive caution, such as following rules or precedents to the letter in
instances where good judgment would have called for a curtailment from
exact compliance, can come back to haunt the more experienced
practitioner, who commands a higher hourly rate to make tough
determinations.
Although lawyers are not expected to predict the future, we are
increasingly called on to describe a range of likely outcomes. Failure to
qualify the limits of predictive analysis can lead to unmet expectations, if
the actual outcome is “off the radar.”
Lawyers are called on more and more to push the envelope of acceptable
practice. Clients expect absolute loyalty, whereas the rules of conduct
provide for competing loyalties among the lawyer’s relationships with
various stakeholders. The LSUC v. Groia matter showed the dilemma of
choosing between a winning tactic and complying with the rules of the
profession regarding advocacy.
Recognition of the boundaries of good practice is a matter of continuous
vigilance. That is the difference between being a technician and being a professional.
You must also protect yourself, your law partners and those depending on you. Making
sure the activities of your law practice are covered by insurance is also a priority. The
balance of this paper provides an overview of significant topics relating to lawyers’
professional liability insurance.
Mandatory E&O Coverage: Some Need-to-Know Topics
(a) Claims-Made not Occurrence
In Ontario, the mandatory LawPro lawyers’ errors and omissions (E&O) policy is a
“Claims-Made” policy. This means that it responds to claims not when the error or
omission occurred, but when the demand or allegation is made against you. This makes
the policy different from, say, liability provisions in most homeowner, automobile and
business insurance packages, which are “occurrence” policies insuring against events
that take place during the policy period. This distinction ordinarily does not affect
lawyers, because it is a condition of our licence to carry at least $1,000,000 in E&O
insurance.
However, where the difference becomes important is the instance where a
lawyer retires or changes from private practice to take up an employee lawyer position
in a company or in public service. For example, an error committed by a lawyer in her
last year of private practice may not give rise to a claim until several years after he or
she quits to take an in-house position. There could be no coverage. A good practice to
follow for those who are about to change jobs from private practice to in-house, is to go
through every file you are handing over to another lawyer, and ensuring there is nothing
to report to LawPro. If you do find an error or omission, let LawPro know about it.
Under Part II, section B of the LawPro policy, the report itself is sufficient to bring future
claims into your last policy term, thus affording you coverage.
Further, if during the POLICY PERIOD, the INSURED first becomes aware of and first reports to the INSURER a CLAIM or circumstances of an error, omission or negligent act which any reasonable LAWYER or LAW FIRM would expect to subsequently give rise to a CLAIM, the INSURER shall deem these a CLAIM made against the INSURED during this POLICY PERIOD, even if a CLAIM is only advanced as against the INSURED after the POLICY PERIOD, and even if a related CLAIM or related circumstances of an error(s), omission(s) or negligent act(s) are reported after the POLICY PERIOD.
(b) When to give notice of a claim
It is always best practice to report to LawPro any time you have even an
inclination that you might have committed an error or omission. Don’t worry about
what anyone else may think. It’s your assets and reputation on the line. If you are an
associate or junior partner in a law firm, reporting to your superiors and to LawPro will
usually be appreciated. The worst thing you can do is to try to ignore or hide the
problem.
Under Part IV (General Conditions), section E, of the standard LawPro policy, you
must immediately give LawPro notice, not only of any E&O claim made against you, but
also any “circumstances of an error, omission or negligent act which any reasonable
person or Law Firm would expect to subsequently give rise to a claim hereunder.” The
most important aspect of this coverage condition is that you cannot make an error
which might get you sued and ignore it, hoping your client will not notice or that the
client will not suffer any adverse consequences. If you were to do that, a host of
problems will start compounding against you, including:
breach of subrule 6.09(1) of the LSUC Rules of Professional Conduct, for failing to
alert a client of a serious error or omission, leading to disciplinary action
breach of subrule 6.09(2) of same, for failure to notify the insurer, also with
possible disciplinary sanctions
you carry the burden of a claim for as long as 15 years (the long-tail limitation
period), until the client’s discovery of the claim starts the two-year limitation
period under the Limitations Act, 2002
you risk breaching the insurance policy condition and losing coverage under the
policy, putting your personal assets at peril
you will almost certainly lose a valued client, most of whom will value your
honesty and integrity and stay with you, provided the potential harm can be
averted or minimized
you may not collect a fee for valuable work you have done, and are liable to have
all of the accounts you have rendered assessed based on a negligent service
argument
The insurance rationale is simple: the insurer would like as much lead-time as
possible, to see if any error can be “repaired” or mitigated.
The “reasonable person or Law Firm” part of the standard by which circumstances of
error must be reported does not mean lawyers or law firms are not reasonable people
(we tend to be!). Rather, the word “reasonable” describes both persons and law firms.
The second part of the phrase ensures that the lawyer is not only to report what clients
might consider errors, but what fellow lawyers might consider errors. That is a rather
high standard, given that we are a self-critical profession, all of whom are taught to
reach for exacting standards. If you have any doubt whether you have committed a self-
reportable error or omission, contact the Law Society’s confidential Practice
Management Hotline (416-947-3315 or 1-800-668-7380 extension 3315), or call another
lawyer whom you respect, on a confidential basis. In either case, keep a separate file
for potential claims, and make a written record of your discussion. That way, if the
decision is made not to self-report, you can go back to the discussion to prove you made
an effort to determine what a reasonable law firm might or might not do.
Also, as stated earlier, reporting circumstances out of which claims might arise, as
immediately as possible, can also save you from an uncovered claim, should you
terminate insurance upon taking up an employed in-house lawyer position or wish to
retire.
(c) How (not) to pick your defence counsel
You will have a say in the selection of defence counsel and will be provided an
opportunity to request one who will best serve your needs. Given that your reputation
and your future premium levels are at stake, you will want more than a ‘hired gun.’ You
will want someone whom you can trust to understand the nature of your practice so as
to minimize the impact of a claim, whatever its merits.
Remember that it is a claim made against you. Sometimes lawyers requiring
defence counsel will want to appoint their friend or a colleague from a local bar
association. Almost invariably, this is the worst thing you can do. Acting for personal
friends or long-time acquaintances poses conflict of interest issues because the practice
compromises defence counsel’s objectivity – a pillar of good and aggressive defence
representation.
Another frequent no-no is for lawyers in specialized areas wanting defence
counsel from the same area, for fear that a generalist defence litigator may not
understand the nuances. It is an offshoot of the classic phrase, “A lawyer who
represents himself in court has a fool for a client.” The classic is a real estate lawyer
seeking to retain another real estate lawyer as defence counsel. The problem with that
is that defending a professional against civil liability is not real estate law but tort and
contract law. A defence lawyer needs to know how to craft pleadings, competently
conduct discoveries, and know her or his way around the courtroom. A fellow specialist
could be considered to be an expert witness as to the standard of care, and should not
be the lawyer representing the real estate lawyer on an error or omission. (The
exception to this might be in matters of repair, where a fellow real estate lawyer or
other solicitor might be retained to make right or to mitigate any damages suffered by
the client.) If doctors and dentists entrust lawyers to defend them in court on
malpractice claims, so can lawyers.
Finally on this point, appointing a friend or long-time colleague to act as an
expert witness on your behalf is even worse than hiring such a person as your defence
counsel. Rule 53.03 of the Ontario Rules of Civil Procedure require expert witnesses to
execute an acknowledgment of his or her duty to be impartial. If you or your counsel
insist on retaining the best man or maid of honour from your wedding as an expert
witness, you can count on the former client’s lawyer to find out about it and cross-
examine the expert on impartiality, holding a picture from the wedding that a friend or
relative posted on Twitter. Juries already arrive at court suspecting lawyers and their
expert witnesses to be friends. Why not dispel the myth by retaining an expert with
whom you’ve had no prior social interaction?
(d) Claims History Levy surcharge (Endorsement 4 of the Standard LawPro Policy)
Depending on the number of claims paid, a premium surcharge is imposed for
any past “claims paid” over a period of five years, starting with $2,500 for the first
“claim paid.” The definition of a “claim paid” is a payment made by LawPro “pursuant
to a judgment, or by way of repair or settlement of a claim” or “… for CLAIM(S) reported
on or after January 1, 2004, where payment is made in respect of a CLAIM resulting in
the LIMIT OF LIABILITY per CLAIM under the POLICY being exhausted, even though no
payment has been made on the INSURED'S behalf under the POLICY pursuant to a
judgment, repair or settlement, unless the INSURED can establish that no final judgment
has as yet been made against the INSURED, and no payment has as yet been made on
the INSURED'S behalf outside of the POLICY pursuant to a judgment, repair or
settlement.” For the purposes of the present discussion, I focus on the definition which
includes payment to repair or settle a claim.
It does not matter whether the claim paid was for a few thousand dollars, or a
few million. At six claims paid per five year period, the surcharge is as high as $35,000
per annum, and there is potentially a limitless surcharge of $10,000 per claim paid,
above six. The fact that LawPro has the right and discretion to settle claims, it also has a
duty to you, the Ontario lawyer, to do so in good faith. LawPro will honour that
commitment. However, it is also important for you to understand the consequences of
various settlement opportunities, as well as those of defending the claim to trial.
Most senior lawyers, but not many new ones, appreciate what this means. For
example, if you had been acting for a client on a small business matter were
subsequently sued after the deal falls through, the issue of settlement will come up.
The former client, taking advice that the chances of success are not good, might offer to
settle out for a modest fraction of the claim. By usual standards these days, a
settlement of $5,000 would be considered a nuisance settlement and a win for the
defence. But if the $5,000 settlement made by LawPro results in a Claims History Levy
Surcharge totalling more than that amount over the ensuing five years, you may as well
have paid the $5,000 yourself. (Note that this feature of the policy refers to “claims
paid.” There are no penalties for the number of times you report yourself in respect of
potential claims, provided they do not result in payments, except for the limited
circumstances in the second definition of “claims paid.”)
Is it Law?
Lawyers are covered against professional negligence
Lee is a lawyer
Lee is covered against professional negligence.
This flawed version of the famous “Socrates is mortal” syllogism1 illustrates a
common pitfall. The fact that Lee is a lawyer does not mean that he is practicing law
when he commits negligence. For example, when Lee sat as a board member of the
Canadian Bar Association, he would not have been covered by the LawPro E&O policy
and would have had to rely on the corporation’s Directors and Officers’ coverage. The
reason for this distinction in coverage arises from the wording of Part I, clause A of the
standard LawPro policy is the so-called “insuring agreement,” the part where the insurer
agrees to pay. It reads that the insurer agrees:
To pay on behalf of the INSURED all sums which the INSURED shall
become legally obligated to pay as DAMAGES arising out of a CLAIM,
provided the liability of the INSURED is the result of an error, omission or
negligent act in the performance of or the failure to perform
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES for others.
In order to come under this coverage, the claim must be for unintended
consequences of legal services you perform for clients. There is an expansive body of
1 All men are mortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore, Socrates is mortal.
case law on the distinction between an “error, omission or negligent act” and an
intentional act such as fraud or deceit. Much of this case law has focused on pleadings
of former clients whose allegations can be construed as fraud, negligence, or perhaps
both. Almost all of the case law deals with the duty to defend the law suit. The topic
extends beyond the scope of this presentation, but it is important to note that this will
be a threshold issue in most cases where the E&O insurance coverage is in doubt.
The next issue that frequently emerges arises from the definition of
“professional services.”
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES means the practice of the Law of Canada, its
provinces and territories, and specifically, those services performed, or
which ought to have been performed, by or on behalf of an INSURED in
such INSURED’S capacity as a LAWYER or member of the law society of a
RECIPROCATING JURISDICTION, subject to Part II Special Provision A; and
shall include, without restricting the generality of the foregoing, those
services for which the INSURED is responsible as a LAWYER arising out of
such INSURED’S activity as a trustee, administrator, executor, arbitrator,
mediator, patent or trade mark agent.
The first line of the above provision makes it clear that you are only insured for
services performed in respect of Canadian law. This means the coverage is determined,
not by the physical location of your practice but rather the choice of law. This can be
complicated, if you have an international practice. It means you are covered if you fly to
another country to conduct an examination for discovery under the Ontario rules. It
also means you are covered if you are conducting a deposition in Toronto in respect of a
U.S. law suit under commission ordered by a Canadian court under the local rules, but
you are not covered if you act as counsel or as agent in the U.S. law suit in the same
deposition using U.S. deposition rules, without a Canadian court order. It means you are
covered if you are advising clients about immigrating to Canada, but not covered if you
are advising clients about emigrating to another country.
The coverage for providing services pertaining to Canadian law is also subject to
the condition either that such services occupy less than ten per cent of your docketed
time or gross billings for professional services for the year; or that the claim or civil suit
against you is brought in Canada, and the related issues, including liability and damages,
are adjudicated on their merits in Canada pursuant to the laws of Canada, its provinces
and territories, by a court in Canada. I would read the either/or to mean that the
coverage applies to out-of-country services where the suit against you is launched in the
foreign jurisdiction, provided you do not exceed the ten percent rule, and to suits
launched in Canada, regardless of the ten per cent rule, provided they also meet the
“Canadian law” requirement.
It can also arise in less jet-setting practices. What if your Snow Bird client comes
to you about an auto accident in Florida? Unless you are also called to the Florida Bar
and are licensed and insured to practice there, you can advise him or her that the
Ontario law of conflicts of laws would likely choose Florida law for the substantive law,
including any limitation periods for pursuing the other driver. If you were to look up the
Florida law on the internet and get the limitation period wrong, you may very well not
be covered for the mistake. The standard of care and insured course of action in that
instance would be to consult a lawyer from the foreign jurisdiction and to report the
advice as a matter of fact and not of law.
At first blush, the above coverage may also appear to cover various non-lawyer
activities such as acting as a trustee for a relative’s estate. Note, however, that the
activity can arise out of such non-law activities, but the services rendered to the estate
or other body must be “as a lawyer.”
Excess Coverage
Excess insurance is relatively inexpensive, and well worth the peace of mind.
Lawyers tend to be born insomniacs – you don’t need anything else keeping you up at
night! Although it is not cheap, like any other cost of doing business you have to budget
for it and build it into the overhead portion of your fees.
LawPro’s standard (mandatory) policy provides coverage with insurance limits of
$1 million per claim and $2 million in the aggregate. This means there is $1 million in
coverage for each claim, but no matter how many claims there are against you, the
maximum payable for claims made during any policy year is $2 million.
I once ran into a lawyer who was practicing in residential real estate. Somehow
the topic got on to excess insurance. He said he did not have any. This was at a time
when the majority of houses in the Toronto area were creeping up above the $500,000
range, and any house in a prime neighbourhood started at over $1,000,000. I told him
that even a purchase/sale deal worth $1,000,000 is in fact worth more, considering the
transactional costs of the deal itself. I told him that he has to take stock of the highest
value of any file in his practice, and get excess insurance to cover it plus any unexpected
surprises, such as a claimant saying the property was increasing dramatically in value.
Similarly with litigation. If a claim comes in through the door for more than the
limits of your existing excess liability coverage, phone your broker and get your excess
insurance topped up. For example, your average sole practitioner or small firm involved
in personal injury will occasionally see a motor vehicle accident case involving a
catastrophic victim. The statutory accident claim itself could be worth upwards of $2
million, and these days tort awards into the high teens (millions) are not unheard of. A
missed limitation period or a bad result at trial could lead to a claim, several millions of
dollars above the standard LawPro limits. Why take the risk?
Questions? Contact the author at [email protected]
Website: www.gilbertsondavis.com Blog: leeakazaki.com
Follow on Twitter: @LeeAkazaki Search for Lee Akazaki on LinkedIN and join his network
U:\RLA\186993\OBA\Commons Institute\Legal Professional Negligence and Insurance.docx